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Digitized by the Internet Archive
in 2018 with funding from
Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health
https://archive.org/details/harvardschoolofp1964harv
THE CLASS OF 1964
THE HAR VARD SCHOOL
OF PUBLIC HEAL TH
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS
harvard university
SCHOOLS OF MEDICINE AND PUBLIC HEALTH
LIBRARY
IN
APPRECIATION
TO
WINTHROP LABORATORIES
t
o
\
J
i
DEDICATION TO JOHN F. KENNEDY
OUR late President, John F. Kennedy, was long a leader in the health field.
In the Senate, he served on the Committee on Labor and Public Welfare that
considers health legislation.
As President, he strongly favored provision of medical care to the aged under the
Social Security Act.
He was the first president to make a public proclamation on the importance of a
community action program to combat mental illness and mental retardation which has
since become law.
He established the Peace Corps which has both a direct and an indirect impact on
world health.
He was an inspirational and ideological leader for young scientists and humanists
everywhere who are concerned with the betterment of man’s condition.
In the framework of his discussion of mental illness and mental retardation he
offered public health workers in every setting and every land a voice of strength and
vision when he said,
mint seek out the causes ■ ■ . ; u'e must strengthen the underlying
resources of knowledge and . . . manpower ■ ■ ■ ; ice must strengthen and
improve the programs and facilities. Prevention should he given the highest
priority.
” . . . lUe must act . . . to bestow the full benefits of our society on those
u’ho suffer . . . to restore and revitalize their lives.”
President Kennedy signing
Mental Health Bill S-1576.
4
ADMINISTRA TION
John Crayton Snyder, A.B., M.D.
Dea)i of the School of Public Health
Heury Pickering W^alcott Professor of Microbology
and Head of the Departjnent
6
James L. Whittenberger, S.B., M.D., A.M. (Hon.)
Assistant Dean of the School of Pnblic Health
fames Stevens Simmons Professor of Public Health
Professor of Physiology and Head of the Department
ADMINISTRA TIVE STAFF
Left to right — Margaret Barnaby, Colette Farragher, Beverly Laskey, Agnes Murphy,
Gail Stocker, Bess Foxman, William Claff, Roger Spaulding, Mary Turchin, Jean
Haley, Margaret Penrose, Irene Forbes, Judith Godden, John C. Snyder.
7
WiLLiAi\[ Hathavc’ay Forbes, A.B., A.M., Dr. Phil., M.D.
Assistant to the Dean and Faculty Advisor for
Foreign Students
Foreign students arrived to a warm welcome at an
Orientation Course in September, 1963. This served as
an introduction to the School, to Boston, and to the Amer¬
ican way of life. It was also a first meeting with the Advisor
to Foreign Students, Dr. William Forbes, who proved very
helpful throughout the year, not only in his official capacity
but on a private and personal basis as well.
OUR ORIGINS AND DESTINATIONS
OUR September 20 meeting with the Dean brought us together, 76 of us for the
first time, to learn some surprising things about our composite character. We are
the 42nd class. Our alumni cover all the United States and 80 foreign countries.
The class of 1963-64 is no exception to this catholic representation:
United States . 86
Europe . 7
India and Pakistan . 3
Africa . 2
Far East . 2
Canada . 2
Middle East . 2
Australia . 1
Total from 20 countries . 107
Academically, we hope to take home the following degrees:
Dr. P.H . 7
S.D. Hyg . 20
S.M. Hyg . 31
M.P.H. . 38
M.I.H . 2
Special students . 9
8
But a staggering number of student-years have already garnered the following:
M.D . 61
Ph.D . 4
D.D.S . 2
D.V.M . 3
M.S.W . 3
Others . 33
(Engineers, Statisticians, Nurses, Chemists, Biochemists, Health Educator, Health Ad¬
ministrator, Sanitary Engineer, Radiological Hygienists, Industrial Hygienists, Nutri¬
tionists.)
We felt that such persistence deserved investigation.
In February, at the beginning of the second semester, the Class of 1964 had a chance
to record its reflections on coming to Shattuck Street and on what may follow after.
Some numbers:
82% answered part, 32% answered most of questionnaire
85% describe some particular area of public health as an interest
20% have no particular future position in mind
40% expect to return to the same job
35% mention that either their coming or their next position is in the hands of some
organization or agency
20% mention shifting from an area of practice to an area of research — and
20% mention moving from research to practice
Some quotes:
- — from the Class — from Geoffrey Vickers
"Saw public health as a more compre- "a greater power to understand”
hensive enterprise”
"needed formal training to perform bet- "techniques limit us”
ter”
"felt epidemiology was the tool of the
future”
"developed a greater respect for the
competence necessary to do planning and
lead action”
"the content of the field is growing and
new tools are needed”
"the distribution of disease is full of
oddities”
"it is within the field of public health
to explore the processes of decision”
"the landmarks of history are the mo¬
ments when some condition passes from
the category of the given to the category
of the intolerable”
9
NUMBER ONE
SHATTUCK STREET
EIETY-EIVE
SHATTUCK STREET
The Harvard School of Public Health
NUMBER? SHATTUCK STREET
Better known among the student side-walk engineers as The
Hole, soon to be transformed into the new Harvard Medical
School Library
I I
RESEARCH LABORATORIES IN
mVIRONMENTAL HEALTH AND NUTRITION
For which the School is indebted to numerous individuals, corpora¬
tions, foundations and the government, all of whom have provided
facilities and funds to support the departments housed here: Indus¬
trial Hygiene, Nutrition, Physiology and Sanitary Engineering.
X-SIXTY-FIVE HUNTINGTON A VENUE
liu
‘i.
Robert H. Hamlin
Head of the Department
of Public Health Practice
PUBLIC HEALTH PRACTICE
11
My major activity and interest for the future are to see the Department of Public
Health Practice fulfill its responsibilities realistically and broadly to its students
and to world society by its search for and dissemination of knowledge.
It is people — staff and students — that really make a department what it is; they are
by far the most important determinants of its interests. And among my interests for
future major activities of the Department of Public Health Practice are the following:
• A better understanding of sociocultural factors in health and disease and in the
administrative process.
• More insight into methods for influencing the quantity and quality of personal health
services available to people throughout the world.
• Greater comprehension of the process of economic development and the particular
role played by investments in health programs.
• Increased understanding of the influence of organizational and administrative struc¬
ture on health programs through the comparative study of different organizations
with similar objectives.
• And last, but far from least, better curriculum and teaching programs for our stu¬
dents so that we can assist them most effectively in becoming leaders in public health
and related professions.
Robert Henry Hamlin
Head of Department
Left to right — Sydney Croog, Beryl
Magee, Roy Penchansky, Sol Levine,
Norman Scotch, Peggy Salmon,
Robert Hamlin, Marjorie Young,
Katherine Fitzpatrick.
15
COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTH PROGRAM
ON July 1, 1964 our Community Mental Health Program will transfer en bloc
from Harvard School of Public Health to Harvard Medical School. A new insti¬
tution will be established under my direction in the Department of Psychiatry to be
called the Laboratory of Community Psychiatry.
The major reason for this move is my wish to bring our activities into closer relation¬
ship with the main stream of psychiatric education and research. In the new setting we
will participate in the education of psychiatric residents and medical students, and we
will also offer a special program to professors of psychiatry from other medical schools,
who will attend on a visiting basis an intermittent seminar two or three times a year
for a three-year period. These plans are associated with recent developments in Amer¬
ican psychiatry. The rapidly growing interest in establishing local community programs
for the prevention and control of mental disorders, which was stimulated by the Report
of the Joint Commission of Mental Illness and Mental Health and by the Message to
Congress of the late President Kennedy on February 5, 1963, has created an urgent
demand for a reorientation of psychiatric education towards community and preventive
theories and practices. In the past, these issues were mostly viewed with disinterest in
medical schools; and schools of public health offered a welcome base for the few re¬
search and development programs in community mental health in this country. During
Left to right — Barbara Lowe, Claire
Belyea, Gerald Caplan, Charlotte
Owens, Rhona Rapaport.
16
Gerald Caplan
Head of the Program
Community Mental Health
the coming years there is likely to be a radical change, and our move to Harvard
Medical School is an early sign of this. The professors of psychiatry who will attend
our Visiting Seminar will all be developing programs of research and education in
community psychiatry in their own medical schools.
I am pleased that our move will be effected with a minimum of upset in the educa¬
tional program in community mental health at the School of Public Health. The new
developments increase rather than reduce the need of public health workers to learn
about problems of the prevention and control of mental disorders. Dean Snyder has
announced that Harvard School of Public Health will encourage cross registration of
its students in courses in the Laboratory of Community Psychiatry. The Laboratory
course schedule will be arranged so as to facilitate H. S. P. H. students taking elective
courses with us in topics such as the theory and practice of preventive psychiatry,
strategies of community mental health research, group and community processes, and
administrative problems in community psychiatry. In addition, I and members of my
staff will continue to participate on a sessional basis in the teaching of regular courses
in such Harvard School of Public Health Departments as Epidemiology, Maternal and
Child Health, Public Health Practice, and Industrial Hygiene. We hope these and
other measures will lead to a full collaborative partnership between us to the mutual
benefit of our students and of our research and teaching programs.
17
Gerald Caplan
Head of the Program
SOCIAL SCIENCE UNIT
There are two main missions of the Social Science Program: (1) to make
physicians and other public health professionals alert to the social and cultural
factors in health and to make them familiar with the research methodology of
social science; (2) to build scientific knowledge which will help public health
change agents or men of action and, equally important, to have this knowledge
feed back into and enrich basic social science theory and methodology, per se.
Sol Levine
Head of the Unit
Lejt to right — Norman Scotch, Sol Levine, Sidney Croog.
18
sANITAR Y ENGINEERING
J. Carrell Morris
Acting Head of the Department of
Sanitary Engineering
19
SANITAR Y
Myron Fiering
The principal areas of my research in¬
terest within the Sanitary Engineering
Department have been two; the chemistry
of the chlorination and disinfection of
water supplies, and the adsorptive removal
of persistent pollutants from waste waters.
Gaseous chlorine or germicidal compounds
of chlorine and other halogens when added
to water react in a variety of ways with the
water or with impurities in it. The germi¬
cidal effectiveness of a particular material
or method of treatment is a function of the
types of reactions occurring, their rates, and
the equilibrium or final concentrations of
the products of the reactions. Among the
most significant of these reactions are those
with ammonia or other nitrogenous com¬
pounds to yield chloramines. Studies on the
formation and reactions of chloramines have
been a continuing research interest for the
past 18 years. Just now the reactions of
20
ENGINEERING
Gordon M. Fair
aqueous chlorine with sulfamate, an addi¬
tive being used to stabilize residual chlorine
in swimming pools, are being studied. It is
hoped that all of this work can be sum¬
marized in a monograph within the next
year or two.
For the past three years, I have also
been investigating the removal of detergents,
pesticides and other noxious persistent com¬
pounds from wastes and polluted waters by
adsorption on granular activated carbon.
This has been a part of the Advanced
Waste Treatment Program of the U. S.
Public Health Service. Results have been
encouraging and it appears that adsorption
with granular beds of activated carbon may
be an economically feasible method for
water treatment in many instances.
J. Carrell Morris
Head of the Department
21
Robert Balentine Reed
Head of the Department
of Biostatistics
BIOSTATISTICS
22
I TEND to agree with the remark attributed to
Lord Kelvin, "When you cannot measure it,
when you cannot express it in numbers, your knoiii-
edge is of a maegre and unsatisfactory kind.”
The most useful numbers are, of course, statistics,
since statistics not only express knowledge but, at the
same time, measure lack of knowledge or uncer¬
tainty. In a world full of decisions that have to be
made in the face of uncertainty, such numbers should
be a great comfort.
Robert B. Reed
Head of the Department
Left to right — Jane Menken at the IBM 1620 playing Reed’s composition for typewriter and
EDPS for Diana Fischer, Joan Davidson, Lena Wettermark, Claire Wasserboehr, Robert Reed,
Linda Parrish, Judith Bryden, Carol Evans, Jane Worcester, and David Heer.
23
There is now an increased opportunity to see whether well planned programs
which mobilize the capabilities of physicians, nurses, and social workers can effec¬
tively extend the best of maternity and infant health care among the population which
suffers from "urban medical blight.” This opportunity exists because of the new pro¬
gram of maternity and infant care projects authorized by Congress, under the direction
of the Children’s Bureau.
When the infant mortality rate in one health district of a city is more than 21/2 times
greater than the rate in another health district, I think we have a problem of great
interest and of great importance. The infant mortality rate actually increased in seven
Boston Health Districts between 1950 and 1961. The problem of higher rates of infant
death, and premature birth with its sequelae, among poverty-ridden groups is similar
in all the large cities, and 25 million people live in 15 cities in the United States.
Left to right — Derek
Robinson, Olivia Brum,
Sylvia Krakow, Elizabeth
Rice, Ruth Butler, William
Schmidt, Miriam Ekdahl,
Isabelle Valadian.
I hope that studies related to the new maternity and infant care projects will show
whether perinatal casualties can be reduced and, if so, to what extent and by what
means. Such studies are closely related to other community studies of maternal and
child health that we have been interested in. Among them are studies of variation in
prenatal and child care in Cambridge, social factors in child health services in a hous¬
ing development, and care of children of parents hospitalized for mental illness. Involve¬
ment with problems of maternal and child health services in this area provides fresh
material for seminars, the chief method of teaching in the Department.
I have a deep interest in the problems of maternal and child health in other coun¬
tries, but I think that the problem on our doorstep cannot be ignored.
William M. Schmidt
Head of the Department
24
MATERNAL AND
William Morris Schmidt
Head of Departmefii
of Maternal and
Child Health
CHILD HEALTH
TROPICAL PUBLIC HEALTH
26
Rear Row — Dr. Michelson, Dr. Spielman, Dr. Frothingham, Dr. Alford, Dr. Pan, Dr. Chernin,
Dr. Burnett. Front Row — Mrs. Butler, Dr. Weller.
Those of us in the Department of Tropical Public Health find our interests focused
on the ever expanding list of infectious agents that attack mankind, and particu¬
larly on the ecological determinants of the diseases they produce. In a brief summary,
it is possible to express specific priorities of interest in such a multifaceted area only
in general terms. At the top of the general list must come the primary responsibility
of any academic institution, namely, the task of attempting to improve our teaching
program so as better to disseminate relevant knowledge, to our student body and to
colleagues in other disciplines. Our teaching obligations increase as old infectious dis¬
ease problems reappear in new forms — at a time when it is fashionable to de-emphasize
the teaching of infectious disease at all educational levels in medicine and public
health.
A second obligation inherent in an academic environment is the development of
new knowledge, and particularly of knowledge that is immediately relevant to the
solution of pressing health problems. We look with pride, for example, on the con¬
tributions of our research group that for the past ten years has focused on schisto¬
somiasis, and has now achieved a worldwide reputation for pioneering research on
this most important parasitic disease.
A final obligation deals with the responsibility to perpetuate and improve the sub¬
stance and philosophy of our program. Thus, we are involved in a variety of programs
that literally are global in extent. These range from the recruitment of medical stu¬
dents through the provision of field experience in developing areas, to the acceptance
of a direct role in the molding of scientific and other decisions at various levels via
service with national and international consultant groups. In line with this objective,
it is our hope that the Class of 1964, as a consequence of the mutually stimulating
interaction that should characterize the student-teacher relationship, will have found
something of philosophical as well as factual value in our offering.
Thomas H. Weller
Head of the Departoient
27
MICROBIOLOGY
John C. Snyder
Head of the Department of
Microbiology
The most important activity of the Microbiology Department in the immediate
future is that of developing its part of the new Center for Prevention of Infectious
Diseases, namely, the establishment of endowment and construction funds, the planning
of new laboratories and classrooms, and the coordination of the teaching program with
the new curriculum for the Master of Public Health degree.
At present, the two departments most directly concerned with infectious diseases.
Microbiology and Tropical Public Health, are located at a considerable distance from
one another in different buildings and are handicapped by crowded and inadequate
facilities. During the academic year 1963-64, we are launching a major effort to obtain
funds for the construction of six floors in the new research buildings of the school.
These floors will be designed to provide adequate facilities not only for research on
the various infectious agents which continue to plague mankind but also for the explora¬
tion of the role of infectious agents in the causation of diseases hitherto regarded as
non-infectious, for example, cancer, mental retardation and certain chronic degenera¬
tive disorders.
The importance of the emphasis by the Harvard School of Public Health on the
prevention of infectious diseases is underscored by the recent trend in medical educa¬
tion to reduce sharply the time devoted to the study of infectious diseases. Thus com¬
munities, states, and nations must depend increasingly on the graduates of schools of
public health for intelligent leadership in the control and prevention of epidemics and
in the search for the causes of diseases affecting large segments of society. The School
has accepted the responsibility for intensifying its program of research on infectious
diseases, and for providing in its future curriculum a comprehensive and balanced
presentation, to include the essential knowledge as well as the principles upon wihch
to base wise administrative practices in the prevention and control of infectious
diseases of man.
28
John C. Snyder
Head of the Department
John Snyder, Sam Bell, Ed Murray, Charlotte Campbell, Bill Vinson.
ARAMCO TRACHOMA RESEARCH PROGRAM
Left to right — Mehdi Hassan, Sayed Saud, Saeed Ahmed. A1 Gharyafi, Ibrahim Ali, Beverly Grear,
Dorothy McComb, John Snyder, Roger Nichols, Nadim Haddad. S. D. Bell, Edna Tietjen, Ali
Abdul Rahman.
29
PHYSIOLOGY AND THE DIVISION
OF EVIRONMENTAL HEALTH SCIENCES
AS one engaged more in administrative than other academic matters, I find it diffi¬
cult to identify a single activity of maximum concern. Two activities, however,
are of recurring interest. One is the recruitment of qualified students into the several
fields of environmental health — for example, those dealing with air and water quality,
ionizing radiation, and occupational health. College students generally are unaware of
these fields and we are now trying to develop methods for recruiting from New England
colleges, using as one mechanism the offer of summer employment in active research
projects at the School. This method could be extended to involve other departments.
The second major recurring interest is the development of methods for studying
possible biologic effects of long-term low level exposure to environmental stresses,
including such factors as altitude or high barometric pressure, and air contaminants in
industrial or residential environments. Methods range from biochemical and psysiologic
responses of cells and laboratory animals to field studies of human populations.
30
James L. Whittenberger
Head of the Department
Seated — Mrs. Price, Edna Dahlquist, Mary Ann DiNapoli, Mrs. Tinsley. Standhig — Ed Berger,
Howard Stoudt, Roland Moore, Dick Easton, Ross McEarland, Toula Coules, Syd Tune, Norman
Mackworth, Richard Domey, Jerry Tinsley, Tom Crowley.
A VIA TION MEDICINE PR OCR AM
The program in aviation medicine at the Guggenheim Center was established to
enable physicians in the military service, air transportation industries, and govern¬
mental agencies to acquire training in preventive medicine, occupational health and
other related disciplines. In addition, courses are provided to train engineers in the
human and biological problems associated with aircraft design and operation.
The tremendous technical advances associated with high altitude aircraft and manned
space flight have increased the need for advanced training of biological scientists in
environmental medicine, protection of health and human abilities in hazardous oper¬
ating environments and in problems of maintaining life with man-made environments.
The Center seems well situated to provide such advanced training. It has an estab¬
lished core in aviation medicine, excellent cross-ties with other departments of the
School and with other technical departments of the University and M. I. T. A fellow¬
ship grant from NASA has made it possible to begin an advanced training program
to enable physicians to contribute to the solution of human problems in space flight.
Funds are being sought to provide the specialized equipment to obtain additional
scientific personnel for an expanded program of research relating to the many unsolved
questions in aviation health and safety. In particular, study of impaired human per¬
formance resulting from extremes of altitude, temperature and noise will be done in
the future.
31
Ross A. McFarland
Head of the Program
INDUSTRIAL HYGIENE
• ' ■
MAYIMOM
ALLOWABL'E
CoNCEMTRA-
TlOMS
Leslie Silverman
Head of the Department
of Industrial Hygiene
32
OUR three areas of interest are radiological hygiene, control of air pollution, and
prevention of occupational disease.
One study in our area involves a new approach to incineration of infectious and
low level radioactive animal wastes. A new oil fired boiler is being added to the
Harvard Medical Area power plant with a means of adding packaged waste auto¬
matically to its combustion chamber. Effluent particulates will be effectively removed
by an electrostatic precipitator unit. We hope that this will provide an answer for the
many medical centers in the country with similar problems.
The other study involves a broad attack on the refuse and waste handling problems
of a large metropolitan community such as Greater Boston. Our approach has been
to develop the concept of shipboard incinerators for both municipal wastes as well as
demolition materials from urban renewal efforts. The shipboard concept removes the
Standing, left to right — Norman Peterson, Stanley Dawson, Shlomo Devir, Ernest Mitchell, Fred
Weideman, Thomas Baldwin, Thomas O’Connor, Ely Bulba, Paul Zilles. Sitting — Jean Cudde,
Gloria Golich, Mary Corrigan, Jacob Shapiro, Leslie Silverman, Janet Walkley, Delia Croteau,
Robert Yoder, Melvin First.
pollution sources from the community air and provides a mechanism whereby coastal
metropolitan areas can use the sea some 20 miles offshore as disposal sites. The wastes
would be burned on shipboard far offshore from the nearby cities. Incinerated ash
and non-combustibles would be safely dumped overboard. We believe it may assist
in developing fish population as well as eliminate air and land pollution. Our planned
research studies for the over-all project will involve analyses of the transport system;
the marine biology and oceanography aspects; and an evaluation of the meteorological
regimes that will be involved. The results of this long-range study may be applicable
to many other communities.
33
Leslie Silverman
Head of the Departoient
EPIDEMIOLOGY
Brian MacMahon
Head of the Department
of Epidemiology
E
iAHiiuyiuiK
34
IN the developmental control over the infectious and nutritional diseases, the study
of the distribution of disease between and within populations has repeatedly proved
of value in (a) pointing to preventive measures that could be effective even in the
absence of knowledge of underlying etiologic mechanisms, and (b) identifying areas
within which laboratory methods might most profitably be employed to elucidate
etiologic mechanisms. The primary objective of the Department of Epidemiology is
to stimulate and encourage the application of similar methods of study to those
diseases for which we still lack adequate control methods. Numerically speaking, the
most important of these, in this country and in most parts of the world are cancer,
mental illness and cardiovascular disease.
Brian MacMahon
Head of the Department
Left to right — Naphtali Brand, Morton Levy, George Hutchison, Eva Salber, Henry Wechsler,
Katherine Shreeve, Brian MacMahon, Thomas Pugh, Theo Abelin, Herbert Ley, Ascher Segall.
35
John Snyder
Acting Head of Department
of Demography & Human
Ecology
DEMOGRAPHY AND
HUMAN ECOLOGY
Disturbing issues occasionally have arisen for medical and health experts as they
have reduced the immediate ravages of a disease in a particular area only to
observe that their work contributed to an increase in misery. Despite gnawings of
conscience there has been very little organized effort within the profession of public
health to deal directly with the serious problems arising from increased population
density.
This Department is expected to become an integral part of Harvard’s new Center
for Population Studies. I am deeply involved in developing plans and amassing the
financial resources needed to assure the success of the Center. Research in the Center
will be closely coordinated with field work in several different regions of the world.
A new curriculum of study and supervised experience will be evolved which will
qualify our graduates for major roles in the activities of states and nations in the regu¬
lations of their populations. The long-range objectives are concerned with defining
"optimum population’’ in the broad context of human and economic resources, social
needs, and scientific advances.
John C. Snyder
Acting Head of the Department
Left to right — Stephen Finner, Rosemary Carpenter, David Heer, John Wyon.
37
38
NUTRITION
Ever since I have been at Harvard (1942), my major aim has been to develop
and maintain a department of nutrition in the health and medical area that will
really be outstanding as an academic unit — outstanding in teaching, in research, and
in service. I feel we have such a department.
Many of the leaders m nutrition in our country and elsewhere are former students
of ours. Outstanding research accomplishments include the development of a fat emul¬
sion suitable for parenteral nutrition; the use of the monkey in cardiovascular research
particularly in the experimental production of atherosclerosis; the development and
description of biochemically different types of obesity; and the development of the
Cardioverter for correcting most abnormal rhythms of the heart. In service, there is
hardly a nutrition committee of any of the United Nations organizations, of our own
government, or of most of the voluntary health organizations that does not have one
of our staff. People have heard of Harvard’s Department of Nutrition from the service
it gives to local PTA groups and science fairs to international committees.
Goals for the future.^ Complete the payments for our new research facilities sooner
than scheduled. Two endowed chairs of nutrition. An endowment of sufficient magni¬
tude so that the department can keep its independence.
To continue to do well in teaching, research, and service, we must do better!
Fredrick J. Stare
Head of the Department
Left to right — Martha F. Trulson, Robert P. Geyer, D. Mark Hegsted, Stanley N. Gershoff, Jean
Mayer, Oscar W. Portman, Patricia A. Stefanik, Robert B. McGandy.
39
STUDENTS AT HSPH 1964
Barry Sinithurst, Harry Ashe, David Weeks, Thomas Byrd.
40
Ray DiNapoli, Dick Easton, Bryant Savage, Warren Hodge.
Stanley Dryden, John Peters, Joe Cimino.
Captane Thomson, Arvid Steen,
Bernard Gray, Kevin Allman, Emma Kraidman,
Norris Hansell.
Manning Feinleib, Robert Carroll, Irving Kessler, Virginia Hannon.
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Anton Veirling, Robert Veit, Larry Samuels, Norman Hasler.
Roger Connelly, Keith MacGaffey, Leo Riley, Lena Wettermark, Lloyd LeZotte.
Kenneth Aycock, Maureen Molloy, Julius Conner, Hernando Posada.
Mary Ann McNichol, Adetokunbo Lucas, William Jobin, Catherine Coolidge.
Charles Buncher, Nadipuram Parthasarathy, David Nitzberg.
Alfonso Holguin, Edward Pratt, Walter Kemmerer, Omar Zawawi.
Stephen Plank, George Brown, Abdur Rashid.
Helen Reinherz, Emma Kraidman.
Elizabeth Watkins, Max Bulian, Marion Hosack.
Scott Allen, Diana Fischer, Gary Friedman.
Donald Logsdon, Kathleen Hawkins, David Rabin.
Anne Schaefer, Parker Reist, Joseph Brain, Dwight Underhill.
Ken Curtis, Ken Cottle, William King, Richard Salina.
Michael Varner, Theodore Georgiadis.
Aune Martikainen, Kirby Campbell.
Julio Maiztegui, Keith Sikes, Erik Rasmussen, Ram Tewari.
51
HAIL AND FAREWELL
This is the age of slogans — quip
phrases that summarize wishes, hopes
and aspirations. At the end of the year
1963-64, we can adopt the slogan; "We
will meet again.”
We will meet again with our colleagues
who, at work and in our leisure hours,
have given us the benefit of their com¬
panionship.
We will meet again with members of
the Faculty of the School who guided
and encouraged our academic endeavours.
We will meet again with the staff.
Faculty wives, and other friends of the
School who in various ways contributed
to the success of our stay at the School.
Meanwhile, we bid farewell to one
and all, with the very best wishes for
success and happiness, and with pleasant
anticipation of our future meetings.
'We will meet again.’
Adetokunbo Lucas
Class Preslcle?7f
PRESIDENT
Adetokunbo Lucas
VICE PRESIDENT
Captane Thomson
CLASS OFFICERS
SECRETARY
Kathleen Hawkins
TREASURER
Robert Carroll
52
Left to right — Captane Thomson, Keith Sikes, Richard Easton, Maureen Molloy, Julius Conner,
Barry Smithurst, Bill Kemmerer.
YEAR BOOK COMMITTEE
Captane Thomson
Bill Kemmerer ...
Keith Sikes .
Richard Easton .
Maureen Molloy ..
Julius Conner .
Barry Smithurst ...
Norris Hansell ...
. . Co-Editor
. Co-Ed it or
. Support
Art and Layout
. Photography
. Biographies
. Activities
. Analysis
CLAIRE WASSERBOEHR
Year Book Secretary
53
FORUM COMMITTEE
Left to right — Erik Rasmussen, Ram Tewari, Arnold Kisch, Ed Pratt, Dave Rabin.
FOR UM SPEAKERS
Dr. Richard Dagy .
Dr. Philip Lee . .
Dr. Richard Easton . .
Dr. Fred Soper . .
Professor John Kenneth Galbraith
. . . Aramco’s Health Program.
. Medical Program of A.I.D.
. Manned Space Flight.
. Yellow Fever.
Politics and Diplomacy of Privation.
. Peace Corps Medical Program
Dr. Richard Smith
54
COFFEE
LOUNGE
Foreground — Dr. Erickson, Dr. Young.
SOCIAL COMMITTEE
Omar Zawawi, Chairman
Hope Snider
Frances Grommets
Eric Rasmussen
Bob Smith
Ed Pratt
Omar Zawawi
55
l-iviu cu
INTERNA TIONAL
HOUSE
Barry Smithurst, Bob Veit, George Brown, John Yoder, D. Carroll, Ajay Pathak, Nancy Weeks,
Norris Hansell, Virginia Hannon. Absent — Mrs. M. Penrose, H. Martilcaine.
HOUSE COMMITTEE
57
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^1” HOUSE IN REVIEW— ^63 - ’64
Boo! Who's that? A tiger on the way to the Halloween Party ... to join petit
kimonoed kittens, caspers, and cowboys . . . who collected $2 for UNICEF.
Easels, canvas, turp and talkers converged Wednesday evenings for the ladies’ oil-
painting sessions.
Two turkeys . . . six dishes of rice . . . twelve pumpkin and mince-meat pies . . .
twenty-four children . . . many more adults ... all gathered together to give thanks.
Santa Lucia came to the children’s Christmas Party and so did Santa Claus . . . Later
Santa found "Little Maggie Penrose” and gave her a hubbly-bubbly. Surprise!
Banjos, guitars . . . Leo, Cap, and George . . . Tokunbo's piano jaz2 ... all on a
Friday night !
Musical girls . . . three men for you and none for me . . . international debate . . .
a midnight supper . . . welcomed a glorious New Year . . . danced the high-life at two!
Mid-Eastern fajafel . . . tabbouleh . . . Indian poories . . . curries . . . Japanese
tempura . . . chopped, blended, rolled, stirred, fried . . . familiar and strange ingredi¬
ents became taste treats in cook classes !
Love me . . . Love me not . . . Goldilocks broke Baby Bear’s chair!
"Good upright style, but we are practicing slanting style” . . . Mrs. Sugano and
Mrs. Kawai taught "Ikebana” . . . generated a new love and respect for flowers.
Faculty Wives saw International House wives’ wares . . . painting . . . flowers . . .
crafts . . . sampled goodies ... at tea.
See you at Chez Gourmet . . . superb food . . . the entertainment — Whee!
Diane R. ("Dee”) Carroll
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LIBRARY COMMITTEE
Sitt'nig — Diana Gerdener, Gabrielle Allman. Standing —
Virginia Hannon, Ram Tewari, Barry Smithurst.
MUSIC COMMITTEE
Left to right — John Gardner, George Brown, Kay Keiser,
Julius Conner. Missing — Collin Dawes.
HEALTH AND SAFETY
COMMITTEE
Left to right — Stan Dryden, Mike Varner, Bob Veit,
Norris Hansell, Cap Thomson.
59
CHILDREN'S COMMITTEE
Left to right, hiside Jungle — Anna and Annika Levy, Elizabeth and Olle Karlstrom, Ajay Pathak.
Loreground — Barbara Curtis, Nancy Weeks, Stephanie Levy, Sharon Varner, Sushma Pathak,
M. A. and Sanjay Pathak.
60
ACTIVITIES
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FACULTY
DIVISION OF ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH SCIENCES
AND ENGINEERING
James L. Whittenberger, S.B., M.D., A.M. (hon.), Head of the Division
DEPARTMENT OE INDUSTRIAL HYGIENE
Leslie Silverman, S.B., S.M., S.M. in Eng., S.D., Professor of Engineering in Environ¬
mental Hygiene and Head of the Department
Charles R. Williams, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Professor of Applied Industrial Hygiene
George E. Wilkins, A.B., M.D., Associate Clinical Professor of Occupational Medicine
Charles E. Billings, S.B. in M.E., S.M., Associate Professor of Industrial Hygiene Engi¬
neering (Absent 1963-64)
Melvin W. First, S.B., S.M., S.D., Associate Professor of Applied Industrial Hygiene
Richard Dennis, S.B., S.M., Assistant Professor of Industrial Hygiene
Jacob Shapiro, S.B., S.M., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Biophysics in Environmental
Hygiene
William A. Burgess, S.B. in M.E., S.M., Assistant Professor of Environmental Health
and Safety Engineering
Robert E. Yoder, S.B., S.D. in Hyg., Associate in Radiological Hygiene
Allen D. Brandt, S.B., S.M., S.D., Visiting Lecturer on Industrial Hygiene Engineering
Nathan Van Hendricks, B.E., Chem. E., Visiting Lecturer on Industrial Hygiene Engi¬
neering
Lawrence S. Cooke, Visiting Lecturer on Illumination
James M. Austin, B.A., M.A., S.D., Visiting Lecturer on Meteorology and Air Pollution
Allen L. Cudworth, S.B., S.M., Visiting Lecturer on Control of Noise in Industry
Ashley St. Clair, A.B., LL.B., Visiting Lecturer on Workmen’s Compensation
Horace W. Gerarde, S.B., S.M., M.D., Ph.D., Visiting Lecturer in Industrial Toxicology
Robert A. Gussman, S.B., S.M., Research Associate in Industrial Hygiene Engineering
Charles A. Mitchell, S.B., S.M., Assistant in Industrial Hygiene
Shlomo E. Devir, M.Sc., Dr. Phil., Research Fellow in Industrial Hygiene
Thomas C. O’Connor, B.Sc., M.Sc., Ph.D., Research Fellow in Air Pollution Control
Harriet L. Hardy, A.B., M.D., Lecturer on Medicine
Albert O. Seeler, A.B., M.D., Clinical Associate in Medicine
DEPARTMENT OE PHYSIOLOGY
James L. Whittenberger, S.B., M.D., A.M. (hon.), James Stevens Simmons Professor of
Public Health, Professor of Physiology and Head of the Department
Ross A. McFarland, A.B., Ph.D., S.D. (hon.), Daniel and Florence Guggenheim Pro¬
fessor of Aerospace Health and Safety
Jere Mead, S.B., M.D., Associate Professor of Physiology
Benjamin G. Ferris, Jr., A.B., M.D., Associate Professor of Environmental Health and
Safety
Edward P. Radford, Jr., M.D., Associate Professor of Physiology
Mary O. Amdur, S.B., Ph.D., Associate Professor of Toxicology
William H. Forbes, A.B., A.M., Dr. Phil., M.D., Lecturer on Physiology
Harben J. Boutourline- Young, M.B., B.S., M.D., Assistant Professor of Physiology
(Absent 1963-64)
64
N. Robert Frank A.B., M.D., Assistant Professor of Physiology
Sheldon D. Murphy, S.B., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Toxicology
Roland C. Moore, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Associate in Industrial P.sychology
Richard G. Domey, S.B., Ed.M., Ed.D., Associate in Environmental Health and Safety
Howard W. Stoudt, Jr., A.B., A.M., Ph.D., S.M. in Hyg., Associate in Physical Anthro¬
pology
Hervey B. Elkins, A.B., Ph.D., Lecturer on Industrial Toxicology
John M. Tyler, A.B., M.D., Research Associate in Physiology
Norman H. Mackworth, M.B., Ch.B., Ph.D., Senior Research Associate in Physiological
Psychology
Thomas J. Crowley, S.B., S.M., Research Associate in Environmental Health and Safety
Dorothy B. Chamberlin, S.B., M.P.H., Research Associate in Physiology
Vilma R. Hunt, B.D.S., M.A., Research Associate in Physiology
John B. Little, A.B., M.D., Instructor in Physiology
Mary E. Beck, A.B., M.D., Research Fellow in Physiology
Leonard I. Kleinman, A.B., M.D., Research Fellow in Physiology
Jules R. Schwaber, A.B., M.D., Research Fellow in Physiology
George S. Tune, B.A., Ph.D., Research Fellow in Biotechnology
David E. Leith, A.B., M.D., Research Fellow in Physiology
Herman F. Froeb, A.B., M.D., Research Fellow in Physiology
Kimio Konno, M.D., Research Fellow in Physiology
Serafettin Tombuloglu, M.D., Research Fellow in Physiology
Eiji Yokoyama, M.D., Dr. Med. Sc., Research Fellow in Physiology
Charles D. Cook, A.B., M.D., Associate Clinical Professor of Pediatrics
Robert G. Monroe, A.B., M.D., Research Associate in Pediatrics
Joseph M. Miller, A.B., M.D., M.P.H., Instructor in Medicine
DEPARTMENT OF SANITARY ENGINEERING
J. Carrell Morris, S.B., A.M., Ph.D., A.M. (hon.), Gordon McKay Professor of Sanitary
Chemistry and Acting Head of the Department
Gordon M. Fair, S.B., S.M. (hon.). Dr. Ing. (hon.). Dr. (hon.), Sc.D. (hon.), Abbott
and James Lawrence Professor of Engineering, Gordon McKay Professor of Sanitary
Engineering
Harold A. Thomas, Jr., S.B., S.M., S.D., Gordon McKay Professor of Civil and Sanitary
Engineering
Werner Stumm, Dr. Phil., A.M. (hon.). Associate Professor of Applied Chemistry
Charles Walcott, A.B., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Applied Biology
Myron B. Fiering, A.B., S.M., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Engineering and Applied
Mathematics
Richard L. Woodward, B.S.C.E., S.M., Ph.D., Senior Research Associate in Sanitary
Engineering
Elisabeth A. M. Stumm, Dr. Phil., Research Associate in Applied Biology
Joseph J. Harrington, B.C.E., A.M., Ph.D., Research Associate in Environmental Health
Engineering
DEPARTMENT OF BIOSTATISTICS
Robert B. Reed, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., A.M. (hon.). Professor of Biostatics and Head of
the Department
Jane Worcester, A.B., Dr. P.H., Professor of Biostatics and Epidemiolo.rty
Margaret E. Drolette, A.B., Associate in Biostatics (Absent 1963-64)
Marvin N. Glasser, B.B.A., M.P.H., S.D. in Hyg., Associate in Biostatics and Epidemi¬
ology
Paul M. Densen, A.B., S.D., Visiting Lecturer on Biostatics
Jane A. Menken, A.B., S.M. in Hyg., Assistant in Biostatics
Anthony E. Bartholomay, A.B., A.M., S.D. in Hyg., Assistant Professor of Mathematical
Biology
DEPARTMENT OE DEMOGRAPHY AND
EIUMAN ECOLOGY
John C. Snyder, A.B., M.D., Henry Pickering Walcott Professor of Microbiology, Acting
Head of the Department
William H. Forbes, A.B., A.M., Dr. Phil., M.D., Lecturer on Physiology, Assistant to
the Dean, and Faculty Advisor to Foreign Students
(ohn B. Wyon, B.A., M.B., B.Ch., M.P.H., Assistant Professor of Population Studies
Ansley J. Coale, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Visiting Lecturer in Demography
Ronald Freedman, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Visiting Lecturer in Demography
Robert G. Potter, Jr., A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Visiting Scholar in Demography
Mary L. New, S.B., M.P.H., Research Associate in Demography and Human Ecology
Stephen J. Plank, Ph.B., A.B., M.D., M.P.H., Teaching Fellow in Demography and
Human Ecology
DEPARTMENT OE EPIDEMIOLOGY
Brian MacMahon, M.D., Ph.D., D.P.H., S.M. in Hyg., Professor of Epidemiology and
Head of the Department
Jane Worcester, A.B., Dr. P.H., Professor of Biostatics and Epidemiology
Thomas F. Pugh, M.D., M.P.H., Associate Clinical Professor of Epidemiology
Albert Damon, A.B., Ph.D., M.D., Associate Professor of Epidemiology
George B. Hutchison, A.B., M.D., M.P.H., Associate Professor of Epidemiology
Herbert L. Ley, Jr., M.D., M.P.H., Associate Professor of Epidemiology and Applied
Microbiology
Ascher J. Segall, M.D., M.P.H., Dr. P.H., Assistant Professor of Epidemiology
Marvin N. Glasser, B.B.A., M.P.H., S.D in Hyg., Associate in Biostatics and Epidemi¬
ology
Ernest M. Gruenberg, A.B., M.D., M.P.H., Dr. P.H., Visiting Lecturer on Epidemiology
Morris Siegel, M.D., M.P.H., Visiting Lecturer on Epidemiology
Vaun A. Newill, S.B., M.D., S.M. in Hyg., Visiting Lecturer on Epidemiology
Eva J. Salber, M.B., Ch.B., D.P.H., M.D., Senior Research Associate in Epidemiology
Samuel G. McClellan, A.B., M.D., M.P.H., Research Associate in Epidemiology
David C. Poskanzer, A.B., M.D., M.P.H., Research As.sociate in Epidemiology
Theodor Abelin, Dr. Med., M.P.H., Research Fellow in Epidemiology
Morton A. Levy, A.B., M.D., Research Fellow in Epidemiology
Louis Weinstein, S.B., S.M., Ph.D., M.D., Lecturer on Infectious Diseases
Henry Wechsler, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Research Associate in P.sychology
DEPARTMENT OE MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH
William M. Schmidt, S.B., M.D., A.M. (hon.), Profes.sor of Maternal and Child Health
and Head of the Department
66
Elizabeth P. Rice, A.B., S.M., Associate Professor of Public Health Social Work
Leon SternfelJ, S.B., M.D., Ph.D., M.P.H., Associate Professor of Applied Maternal
and Child Health and Deputy Commissioner of Health, Commonwealth of Massachu¬
setts
Edward A. Mason, A.B., M.D., Assistant Professor of Mental Health
Isabelle Valadian, M.D., M.P.H., Assistant Professor of Maternal and Child Health
Harold Jacobziner, S.B., M.D., M.P.H., Visiting Lecturer on Maternal and Child Health
Arthur J. Lesser, A.B., M.D., M.P.H., Visiting Lecturer on Maternal and Child Health
Samuel B. Kirkwood, A.B., M.D., S.D. (hon.), Visiting Lecturer on Maternal Health
Edwin M. Gold, S.B., M.D., Visiting Lecturer on Maternal and Child Health
Alan F. Guttmacher, A.B., M.D., Visiting Lecturer on Maternal Health
Helen D. Cohn, M.P.H., Instructor in Applied Public Health Nursing
Derek Robinson, M.B., Ch.B., D.P.H., D.C.H., M.D., Instructor in Maternal and Child
Health
Use E. Gorbach, A.B., M.D., M.P.H., Instructor in Child Health
Benjamin Sachs, A.B., M.D., M.P.H., Instructor in Maternal and Child Health
Arthur J. Salisbury, S.B., M.D., M.P.H., Instructor in Child Health
Zelma B. Miller, S.B., Ph.D., Senior Research Associate in Maternal and Child Health
Ruth M. Butler, A.B., S.M., Research Associate in Social Work
Miriam C. Ekdahl, S.B., S.M. in S.S., Assistant in Social Work
Sylvia G. Krakow, S.B., M.S.W., Assistant in Social Work
Ruth A. Cowin, S.B., S.M., Assistant in Social Work
Roberta A. Savitz, A.B., M.D., Research Assistant in Maternal and Child Health
Charles A. Janeway, A.B., M.D., A.M. (hon.), Thomas Morgan Rotch Professor of
Pediatrics
Duncan E. Reid, S.B., M.D., A.M. (hon.), William Lambert Richardson Professor of
Obstetrics
Clement A. Smith, A.B., A.M., M.D., A.M. (hon.), S.D. (hon.). Associate Professor of
Pediatrics at the Boston Lying-In Hospital
William Berenberg, A.B., M.D., Assistant Clinical Professor of Pediatrics
Robert J. Haggerty, A.B., M.D., Assistant Professor of Pediatrics
Lendon Snedeker, A.B., M.D., M.P.G., Instructor in Pediatrics
DEPARTMENT OE MICROBIOLOGY
John C. Snyder, A.B., M.D., Henry Pickering Walcott Professor of Microbiology and
Head of the Department
Geoffrey Esdall, M.D., Professor of Applied Microbiology and Superintendent of Insti¬
tute of Laboratories, Department of Public Health of Massachusetts
Edward S. Murray, A.B., M.D., M.P.H., Associate Professor of Microbiology and Assist¬
ant Physician to University Health Services
Samuel D. Bell, Jr., A.B., M.D., M.P.H., Associate Professor of Microbiology
Robert S. Chang, B.Sc., M.D., S.D. in Hyg., Associate Professor of Microbiology
Charlotte C. Campbell, S.B., Associate Professor of Medical Mycology
Herbert L. Ley, Jr., M.D., M.P.H., Associate Professor of Epidemiology and Applied
Microbiology
Roger L. Nichols, A.B., M.D., Assistant Professor of Applied Microbiology (Absent
1963-64)
Robert A. MacCready, S.B., M.D., Associate in Microbiology and Director of Diagnostic
Laboratories, Department of Public Health of Massachusetts
67
James A. McComb, D.V.M., Associate in Public Health Immunology and Director of
Biologic Laboratories, Department of Public Health of Massachusetts
Robert B. Pennell, S.B., S.M., Ph.D., Lecturer on Immunology
Herald R. Cox, A.B., S.D., S.D., (hon.). Visiting Lecturer on Microbiology
Robert J. Huebner, M.D., Visiting Lecturer on Microbiology
John H. Hanks, S.B., Ph.D., Visiting Lecturer on Microbiology
Charles H. Rammelkamp, A.B., M.D., S.D. (hon.), Visiting Lecturer on Microbiology
Nadim A. Haddad, B.A., M.D., M.P.H., Research Associate in Microbiology (Absent
196.3-64)
John W. Vinson, S.B., S.D. in Hyg., Research Associate in Microbiology
Kenneth F. Girard, S.B., M.Sc., Ph.D., Research Associate in Microbiology
Maria Ebe Reca, Dr. Chem., Research Associate in Medical Mycology
Dorothy E. McComb, S.B., Assistant in Microbiology
Leo Levine, S.B., Assistant in Microbiology
Jane M. D. O’Connor, S.B., Assistant in Microbiology
Grace C. Yuan, B.S., M.D., Research Assistant in Microbiology
Herman Polet, M.D., Research Fellow in Microbiology
Augusto B. Martins, B.Sc., M.Sc., Dr. Phil., Research Fellow in Microbiology
DEPARTMENT OE NUTRITION
Frederick J. Stare, S.B., S.M., Ph.D., M.D., A.M. (hon.), S.D. (hon.), Professor of
Nutrition and Head of the Department
David M. Hegsted, S.B., S.M., Ph.D., A.M. (hon.). Professor of Nutrition
Robert P. Geyer, S.B., S.M., Ph.D., Associate Professor of Nutrition
Jean Mayer, B.A., B.Sc., M.Sc., Ph.D., D.Sc., Associate Professor of Nutrition and
Lecturer on the History of Public Health
Martha F. Trulson, S.B., M.P.H., S.D. in Hyg., Associate Professor of Nutrition
Stephen B. Andrus, S.B., M.D., Assistant Professor of Pathology
Stanley N. Gershoff, A.B., S.M., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Nutrition
Oscar W. Portman, S.B., M.D., Assistant Professor of Nutrition
Joseph J. Vitale, S.B., S.M., S.D. in Hyg., Assistant Professor of Nutrition
Bernard Lown, S.B., M.D., Assistant Professor of Medicine
Maria Banasiewicz-Rodriguez, M.D., M.P.H., Associate in Nutrition
Robert B. McGandy, A.B., M.D., M.P.H., Associate in Nutrition
Madge L. Myers, A.B., S.M., Instructor in Nutrition
Patricia A. Stefanik, S.B., S.M., Instructor in Nutrition
Edwin L. Prien, A.B., A.M., M.D., Clinical Research Associate in Nutrition
F. Russell Olsen, A.B., Research Associate in Nutrition
Robert E. Clancy, M.D., Research Associate in Medicine
Oscar M. Jankelson, M.D., Research Associate in Medicine
Carl C. Seltzer, A.B., Ph.D., Research Associate in Physical Anthropology
Ethel J. Bowie, S.B., Assistant in Nutrition
Dorothy Bruno, S.B., Assistant in Nutrition
Kathleen M. Broell, S.B., S.M. in Hyg., Assistant in Nutrition
Lenore F. Monello, A.B., A.M., Assistant in Nutrition
Harold E. Lewis, B.Sc., M.B., Ch.B., Senior Research Fellow in Nutrition
Katsutaka Seta, M.D., Dr. Med. Sc., Research Fellow in Nutrition
Michihiro Sugano, B.S., M.S., Ph.D., Research Fellow in Nutrition
Werner Stauffacher, M.D., Research Fellow in Nutrition
68
Agnes M, Huber, B.Sc., Ph.D., Research Fellow in Nutrition
Beverly Anne Bullen, S.B., S.M., S.M. in Hyg., S.D. in Hyg., Research Fellow in Nutri¬
tion
Anik A. Girard, B.A., D.V.M., Research Fellow in Nutrition
Hiroshi Okaniwa, M.D., Dr. Med. Sc., Research Fellow in Nutrition
James H. Shaw, B.A., S.M., Ph.D., A.M. (hon.). Associate Professor of Biological
Chemistry, Harvard School of Dental Medicine
Ira Gore, A.B., M.D., Lecturer on Pathology
Norman Zamcheck, A.B., M.D., Clinical Associate in Medicine
Earl E. Hellerstein, A.B., M.D., Associate in Pathology
Daniel S. Bernstein, A.B., M.D., Instructor in Medicine
Harold J. White, S.B., M.D., Instructor in Pathology
DEPARTMENT OE PUBLIC HEALTH PRACTICE
Robert H. Hamlin, A.B., B.S.M., M.B., M.D., M.P.H., LL.B., Roger Irving Lee Profes¬
sor of Public Health, Director of the Interfaculty Program on Health and Medical
Care and Head of the Department
Alfred L. Frechette, M.D., M.P.H., Clinical Professor of Public Health Practice and
Commissioner of Public Health, Commonwealth of Massachusetts
Leonid S. Snegireff, M.D., M.P.H., Dr. P.H., Associate Professor of Chronic Disease
Control
Gerald Caplan, B.Sc., M.B., Ch.B., D.P.M., M.D., Associate Professor of Mental Health
Sol Levine, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Associate Professor of Social Psychology
Elizabeth P. Rice, A.B., S.M., Associate Professor of Public Health Social Work
Marjorie A. C. Young, S.B., Ed.M., M.P.H., Dr. P.H., Associate Professor of Health
Education
Wallace H. Best, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Lecturer on Public Administration
Edward A. Mason, A.B., M.D., Assistant Professor of Mental Health
Louisa P. Howe, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Mental Health
Sydney H. Croog, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Sociology
Lenin A. Baler, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., S.M. in Hyg., S.D. in Hyg., Assistant Professor of
Mental Health
Roy Penchansky, S.B., M.I.L.R., D.B.A., Assistant Professor of Administration in Medi¬
cal Care
Norman A. Scotch, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., S.M. in Hyg., Assistant Professor of Social An¬
thropology
Charlotte E. Owens, S.B., M.P.H., Associate in Mental Health
Harry T. Phillips, M.B., Ch.B., D.P.H., M.D., Lecturer on Public Health Practice
Leon J. Taubenhaus, A.B., M.D., M.P.H., Lecturer on Public Health Practice
Rhona V. Rapoport, B.Sc., Ph.D., Lecturer on Mental Health
Bellenden R. Hutcheson, S.B., M.B., M.D., Lecturer on Mental Health
Edward B. Kovar, A.B., A.M., Lecturer on Public Health Practice
Olive M. Lombard, B.Sc., S.M. in Hyg., Instructor in Public Health Practice
Mary D. Bain, A.B., M.D., Instructor in Mental Health
Saul Cooper, A.B., A.M., Instructor in Mental Health
John G. McCormick, S.B., S.M., Instructor in Health Education
Elizabeth K. Caso, S.B., S.M., in Hyg., Instructor in Nutrition (Chronic Di.sea.se)
Frances H. Pitts, S.B., S.M., M.P.H., Instructor in Health Education
Donald Ottenstein, S.B., M.D., Instructor in Mental Health
69
James E. Teele, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Research Associate in Sociology
William J. Ryan, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Research Associate in Mental Health
Peggy J. Golde, A.B., Ph.D., Research Associate in Mental Health
Douglas E. Hooper, B.A., Ph.D., Research Associate in Mental Health
Alan P. Sheldon, B.A., M.B., B. Chir., M.A., D.P.M., S.M. in Hyg., Research Assistant
in Mental Health
Charles M. Bryant, A.B., M.D., M.P.H., Teaching Fellow in Public Health Practice
Erich Lindemann, Dr. Phi., M.D., A.M. (hon.). Professor of Psychiatry
Shields Warren, A.B., M.D., S.D. (hon.), LL.D., Professor of Pathology at the New
England Deaconess Hospital
Sidney Farber, S.B., M.D., Dr. P.H. (hon.), S.D. (hon.), Professor of Pathology at the
Children’s Hospital
James M. Dunning, A.B., D.D.S., M.P.H., Clinical Professor and Head, Department of
Ecological Dentistry, Harvard School of Dental Medicine and Director, Dental Health
Service, University Health Services
William J. Curran, LL.B., LL.M., S.M. in Hyg., Lecturer on Legal Medicine, Harvard
Law School, (Utley Professor of Legal Medicine, Director, Law-Medicine Research
Institute, Boston University)
Mary Lee Ingbar, S.B., A.M., Ph.D., M.P.H., Research Associate in the Graduate School
of Public Administration
Gerald D. Rosenthal, A.B., S.M., Ph.D., Instructor in Economics
DEPARTMENT OF TROPICAL PUBLIC HEALTH
Thomas H. Weller, A.B., S.M., M.D., LL.D., Richard Pearson Strong Professor of
Tropical Public Health and Head of the Department
Franklin A. Neva, S.B., M.D., Associate Professor of Tropical Public Health
Eli Chernin, S.B., A.M., S.D., Associate Professor of Tropical Public Health
Charlotte C. Campbell, S.B., Associate Professor of Medical Mycology
Thomas E. Frothingham, M.D., Assistant Professor of Tropical Public Health
Chia-tung Pan, B.Sc., M.D., M.P.H., Assistant Professor of Tropical Public Health
Edward H. Michelson, S.B., S.M., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Tropical Public Health
Paul F. Russell, A.B., M.D., M.P.H., S.D. (hon.). Visiting Lecturer on Tropical Public
Health
Fred L. Soper, A.B., S.M., M.D., Dr.P.H., S.D. (hon.), Visiting Lecturer on Tropical
Public Health
George M. Saunders, A.B., M.D., Visiting Lecturer on Tropical Public Health
Samuel W. Simmons, S.B., A.M., Ph.D., Visiting Lecturer on Tropical Public Health
G. Robert Coatney, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., S.D. (hon.). Visiting Lecturer on Tropical
Public Health
Harry Most, S.B., M.D., D.T.M.&H., D.M.S., Visiting Lecturer on Tropical Public
Health
Richard H. Daggy, S.B., S.M., Ph.D., M.P.H., Dr. P.H., Visiting Lecturer on Tropical
Public Health
Andrew Spielman, S.B., S.D., Associate in Tropical Public Health
Charles A. Alford, S.B., M.D., Research Fellow in Tropical Public Health
Joseph W. Burnett, A.B., M.D., Research Fellow in Tropical Public Health
F. Xavier Pi-Sunyer, A.B., M.D., M.P.H., Research Fellow in Tropical Public Health
Gustave Dammin, A.B., M.D., A.M. (hon.), Elsie 1'. Friedman Professor of Path¬
ology, Harvard Medical School and Peter Bent Brigham Hospital
Fran2 C. von Lichtenberg, M.D., DR. (hon.). Assistant Professor of Pathology, Harvard
Medical School and Senior Associate in Pathology, Peter Bent Brigham Hospital
70
STUDENT BIOGRAPHIES
ALLEN, SCOTT I.
(B.A., Pomona Coll., 1955; M.D., Yale LIniv., 1959; Univ. of Michi¬
gan, 1961.)
Candidate for S.M. in Hyg. (Biostatistics).
Research Fellow, Mass. General Hospital: on assignment from U.S.P.H.S.
1455 Commonwealth Avenue, Apt. 218, Brighton, Mass.
Wife: Edith
Son: Donald
ALLMAN, KEVIN M.
(M.B., B.Ch., Univ. College, Dublin, 1956; D.P.H., Liverpool Univ., 1960;
D.P.M., Univ. Coll., Dublin, 1962; M.R.C.P.L, Royal Coll, of Physicians,
Ireland, 1963.)
Candidate for S.M. in Hyg. (Community Mental Health).
Psychiatrist, Dublin Health Authority, Ireland.
97 Home Farm Road, Dublin 9, Ireland.
Wife: Gabrielle
ASHE, HARRY J.
(A.B., Wesleyan Univ., 1956: M.D., Tufts Univ., 1961.)
Candidate for M.P.H. (Tropical Public Health).
Medical Resident, Maine Med. Center, Portland, Me.
North Main Street, Wolfeboro, N. H.
Wife: Carole
Sons: Harry 3, Andrew 4
Daughter: Laura 1
AYCOCK, EZRA KENNETH
(A.B., Duke Univ., 1950; M.D., Med. Coll, of S. C., 1954.)
Candidate for M.P.H. (Maternal and Child Health).
Asst. Director, M.C.H., South Carolina.
l401 Kathwood Drive, Columbia, S. C.
Wife: Mary (Echo)
Son: Kenny 3
Daughter: Dee Dee 41/2
BELLIN, LOWELL E.
(B.S., Yale Univ., 1948; M.D., N. Y. Downstate Med. Center, 1951.)
Candidate for M.P.H. (Public Health Practice).
Commissioner of Public Health, Springfield, Mass.
74 Forest Glen Road, Longmeadow, Mass.
Wife: Talah
Son: Eran 7
Daughter: Eva 5
BRAIN, JOSEPH DAVID
(B.A., Taylor Univ., 1961; S.M., Harvard LIniv.; S.M. in Hyg., Harvard
School Public Health, 1963.)
Candidate for S.D. in Hyg.
9 Bertrand Drive, Wayne, N. J.
Wife: Judy
BROWN, GEORGE E.
(M.D., Univ. of Toronto, 1961.)
Candidate for M.P.H.
FCjSxi'.n, MEDICO project in Haiti.
23 McMaster Ave., Toronto, Ont., Canada.
Wife: Judith
71
BULBA, ELY
( B.Sc., Technion, Israel Inst, of Technology, Haifa, 1957; Dipl. Engenieur,
Technion, Israel Inst. Tech., 1959.)
Candidate for S.M. in Hyg. (Ind. Hyg.)
Research Engineer, HSPH, Dept. Ind. Hyg.
29 Concord Ave., Cambridge, Mass.
BULIAN, MAX J.
(B.S., Tufts Univ., 1943; M.D., Tufts Med. School, 1946.)
Candidate for M.P.H.
Private Prac.— OBS-GYN.
44 Valley Rd., Chestnut Hill 67, Mass.
Wife; Adele
Sons: John IIV2, Joseph 8
Daughter: Emily 7
BUNCHER, CHARLES RALPH
(S.B., Mass. Inst. Tech., I960.)
Candidate for S.M. in Hyg. (Biostatistics).
Ship Superintendent, San Francisco Naval Shipyard; Lt. U.S. Naval Reserve.
44 Whittingham Terrace, Millburn, N. J.
BURGER, EDWARD J., JR.
(B.S., McGill Univ., 1954; M.D., McGill Univ., 1958; M.I.H., Harvard
School Public Health, 1961.)
Candidate for S.D. in Hyg. (Physiology).
U.S. Navy
Wilsondale St., Dover, Mass.
Wife; Sarah
Daughters: Heidi 28 mos., Hilary 2V2 wks.
BYRD, THOMAS R. (Lt. USN)
(B.S., Clemson College, 1957; M.D., Medical College of S. C., 1961.)
Candidate for M.P.H.
Head, Hlth. Practices Branch, Prev. Med. Div., Bur. of Med. & Surg., Dept,
of Navy, Washington, D. C.
Route 4, Kershaw, S. C.
CAMPBELL, KIRBY 1.
(B.S., Univ. of Calif., 1955; D.V.M., Univ. of Calif., 1957.)
Candidate for M.P.H.
U.S.P.H.S. Proj. Veterinary Officer, Air Pollution Research Center, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside, Calif.
21 Clifton Ave., Los Gatos, Calif.
Wife; Constance
Daughter; Lauren
CARROLL, ROBERT E.
(A.B., Stanford Lffiiv., 1957; M.D., Albany Med. Coll., 1961)
Candidate for M.P.H. (Epidemiology).
Resident in Epid., N. Y. State Dept. Health.
1 1 Kenaware Ave., Delmar, N. Y.
Wife: Diane (Dee)
Sons: James 21/2, Lawrence 1 yr.
CIMINO, JOSEPH ANTHONY
(A.B., Harvard Coll., 1956; M.S., Fordham Lffiiv., 1958; M.D., Univ. of
Buffalo, 1962.)
Candidate for M.I.H. (Occupational Medicine).
A.E.C. Fellow in Occupational Medicine.
2 Burnsdale Ave., Valhalla, N. Y.
Wife: Margaret
Son: Joseph IV2
Daughters: Andrea 5, Laura 4, Lisa 2V2. Linda V2
72
CONNELLY, ROGER R
(B.S., Iowa State Univ., 1958.)
Candidate for S.M. in Hyg.
Statistician, Natl. Cancer Inst.. NIH, Bethesda, Md.
Mason City, Iowa
Wife: Shirley
Daughter: Lorraine 1 yr.
CONNER, JULIUS S.
(B.A., Univ. of Om:rha, 1954; M,D., Univ. of Nebraska, 1957.)
Candidate for M.P.H. (Maternal and Child Health).
Asst. Director, Des Moines Polk County Dept, of Health, Des Moines, Iowa.
5002 S.W. 15th Street, Des Moines, Iowa 50315.
Wife: Salina
Sons: Chuckie 7, Chris 4
Daughter: Beth 2 mo.
COOLIDGE, CATHERINE
(A.B., Radcliffe Coll., 1953; M.D., John Hopkins School Med., 1958.)
Candidate for M.P.H.
Asst. Resident Medicine, Hospital Universitario del Valle, Gali, Colombia, S.A.
Manchester, Mass.
COTTLE, KENNETH E.
(M.D., Southwestern Med. School, Dallas, Texas, 1956.)
Candidate for M.P.H. (Aviation Medicine).
Chief, Aerospace Medicine and Professional Services Div., 30th Air Div.
(SAGE) ADC, Truax Field, Wise.; School of Aerospace Med., Brool:s Air
Force Base, Texas.
1601 S. Blackburn Street, Brady, Texas
Wife: Hattie Bell
CUDWORTH, ALLEN L.
(S.B., Univ. of Alabama, 1949: S.M., Mass. Institute of Technology, 1952.)
Candidate for S.D. in Hyg. (Industrial Hygiene).
Director of Research and Development, Liberty Mutual Insurance Co., Boston.
8 Mark Road, Framingham, Mass.
Wife: Cynthia
Sons: Lindsay 7, James 3
Daughter: Ann 8
CURTIS, KENNETH W., JR.
(B.S., Beloit Coll., 1955; M.D., Univ. of Illinois, 1959.)
Candidate for M.P.H. (Aviation Medicine).
Flight Surgeon, USAF, in Japan; School of Aerospace Med., Brooks AFB,
Texas.
10444 So. Wood Street, Chicago, Illinois.
Wife: Barbara
Son: Kenneth, III, 9 mos.
Daughter: Linda 4
DiNAPOLI, RAPHAEL JOSEPH, JR.
(B.A., Coll, of the Holy Cross, 1955; M.D., State Univ. of New York, Down-
state Coll, of Med., 1959.)
Candidate for M.P.H. (Aerospace Medicine).
Sr. Flight Surgeon and A\’iation Med. Advisor to the Military District of
Washington Surgeon, Davison Army Airfield, Ft. Belvoir, Va.; Resident in
Aerospace Medicine, USAF School of Aerospace Medicine.
838 Carroll St., Brooklyn 15, N. Y.
Wife: Marianne
DRYDEN, STANLEY L.
(B.S., Calif. State Polytechnic Coll., 1962.)
Candidate for S M. in Hyg. (Industrial Hygiene).
1240 Dorothy Drive, Glendale 2, Calif.
73
EASTON, RICHARD E.
(B.A., Univ. of Kansas, 1958; M.D., Univ. of Kansas, 1962.)
Candidate for M.P.H. (Aviation Medicine).
Fli^ylit Surgeon, North American Aviation, Downey, Calif.
1024 Mississippi, Lawrence, Kansas.
Wife: Mary
Daughter: Leslie 2
EEINLEIB, MANNING
(A.B., Cornell Llniv., 195-6; M.D., S. U. N. Y. Downstate Med. Center, 1961;
Al.P.H., Harvard Univ., 1963.)
Candidate for Dr.P.H. (Epidemiology and Biostatistics).
Intern, Mt. Sinai Hosp., N. Y.
9202 Avenue A, Brooklyn 36, N. Y.
Wife; Marcia
FISCHER, DIANA B.
(B.A., Mt. Holyoke Coll., 1956.)
Part-time Student (Biostatistics).
Med. Research Asst., Harvard Med. School; Computer
M.P.H. Degree Program, Yale Univ.
80 Lexington Ave., Cambridge 38, Mass.
Husband; James
FRIEDMAN, GARY D.
(B.S., Univ. of Chicago, 1956; M.D., Univ. of Chicago, 1959.)
Candidate for S M. in Hyg. (Biostatistics).
Med. Officer, Heart Disease Epidemiology Study, U.S.P.H.S., Framingham,
Mass.
35 Alpine St., Cambridge, Mass.
Wife: Ruth
Son: Justin 7 mos.
Daughter: Emily 3
GEORGIADIS, THEODORE
(B.S., Univ. of Athens, 1957.)
Candidate for S.M. in Hyg. (Radiological Health).
Chemist, Greek Atomic Energy Commission.
83 Venizelou Ave. Nea Smyrni, Athens, Greece
Programmer, H.S.P.H.;
GLASS, ROBERT L.
(S.B., Harvard Univ., 1943: D.M.D., Tufts Univ., 1946; M.P.H., Harvard
Univ., 1959.)
Candidate for Dr.P.H. (Epidemiology).
Professor, School of Dental Med., Tufts Llniv.
610 High Street, Westwood, Mass.
Wife: Janet
Sons: Bradford 18, Stephen 16
Daughter: Robin 1 1
GRAY, BERNARD
(A.B., Brooklyn Coll., 1956; Ph.D., Brandeis Llniv., I960.)
Candidate for S.M. in Hyg. (Community Mental Health).
Chief, Psychology Service, Mental Hygiene Consultation
Texas.
158 Harvard Street, Brookline, Mass.
Wife: Zha (Zita)
Sons: Josh 2I/2, Michael 1
GROMMERS, FRANCES
(A.B.. Ratlcliffe Coll., 1952; M.D., Harvard Univ., 1961.)
Candidate for M.P.H. (General).
Intern, Newton-Wellesley Hospital.
63 Mt. Vernon Street, Boston, Mass.
Service, Ft. Bliss,
7-1
HANNON, VIRGINIA R.
(M.A., Atlanta Univ., 1935; M.S.W., Simmons Coll., 1942; M.S. in Hyg.,
Harvard Univ., 1961.)
Candidate for S.D. in Hyg. (Epidemiology).
Assoc. Professor. Atlanta Univ. School of Social Work.
227 West Lake Drive, N.W. Atlanta l4, Ga.
HANSELL, NORRIS
(H.A., Haverford Coll., 1953; M.D., Univ. of Penna., 1958.)
Candidate for S.M. in Hyg. (Community Mental Health).
Wife: Margaret
Sons: Charles 5, Walter 4
Daughter: Ruth 2
HARFOLICHE, JAMAL G. H.
(A.B., American Univ. of Beirut, 1937; M.D., American Univ. of Beirut, 1941.)
Candidate for Dr.P.H. (Maternal and Child Health and Nutrition).
Assoc. Professor, Maternal and Child Health, American LIniv. of Beirut.
HASLER, NORMAN B.
(A.B., Indiana Univ., 1942; M.D., Indiana Univ., 1944.)
Candidate for M.I.H. (Occupational Medicine).
Div. Med. Director, Liberty Mutual Insurance Co., Boston.
1 14 Eastern Ave., Arlington, Mass. 02174
Wife: Catherine
Son: John 10
Daughters: Elizabeth 13, Kathleen 12
HAWKINS, KATHLEEN
(B.A., Marianopolis Coll., 1957; M.D.C.M., McGill Univ., 1961.)
Candidate for M.P.H. (Epidemiology).
Resident, New England Deaconess Hospital (Internal Medicine); Resident,
Public Health and Preventive Med., Boston.
5225 Hutchinson St., Montreal, Quebec, Canada
HIGHRITER, MARION E.
(B.A., Mount Holyoke Coll., 1950; M.N., Yale Univ., 1953; M.P.H., Harvard
Univ., 1958.)
Candidate for S.D. in Hyg. (Public Health Practice).
Nursing Supervisor. San Juan Basin Health LTnit, Durango, Colorado.
409 W. Academy St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
HODGE, WARREN W.
(B.S., Univ. of Louisville, 1955; M.D., Univ. of Louisville, 1958.)
Candidate for M.P.H. (Aviation Medicine).
Flight Surgeon, Carrier Air Group 16, U.S.N.; School of Aviation Medicine,
Pensacola, Fla.
Wife: Irene
HOLGUIN, ALFONSO H.
(B.A., Texas Western Coll., 1951; M.D., Llniv. of Texas, 1957.)
Candidate for M.P.H. (Public Health Practice).
Ass. to the Chief, Laboratory Branch, Communicable Disease Center, Atlanta,
Georgia.
Wife: Irby (Anna)
Sons: Mark 6, Paul 1
Daughters: Laura 7, Theresa 5, Carol 3
75
HOSACK, ALICE M.
(B.S., Univ. of Buffalo, 1945; M.A., Univ, of Chicago, 1951;
Harvard LIniv., 1959- )
Candidate for S.D. in Hyg. (Maternal and Child Health).
Asst. Professor, Boston Univ. School of Nursing.
22 Evans Ways, Apt. ID, Boston, Mass. 02115
jOBIN, WILLIAM R.
(S.B., Mass. Inst, of Technology, 1959; S.M., M.I. T., 1961.)
Candidate for S.M. in Hyg. (Tropical Public Health).
Public Health Engineer, U.S.P.H.S.
7 Philip Lane, Foxboro, Mass.
Wife: Sara
Daughter: Maria 2
KEISER, A. KAY
(B.S., Seton Hall Univ., I960; M P.H., Yale LIniv., 1962.)
Candidate for S D. in Hyg. (Medical Care).
Research Asst, in Medical Care, Yale LIniv., New Haven, Conn.
3412 Bainbridge Ave., N. Y. 67, N. Y.
KEMMERER, WALTER W.
(S.B., Univ. of Houston, 1953; M.D., Baylor Univ., 1959.)
Candidate for M.P.H. (General).
Preventive Medicine Officer, US Army, Europe.
1915 Wehtworth St., Houston, Texas
Wife: Florence
Sons: Walter 7, Christopher 10 months
Daughters: Carolynne 5, Katherine 2, Marianne 1
KESSLER, IRVING 1.
(A.B., New York Univ., 1952; A.M., Harvard Univ., 1955;
Univ., I960; M.P.H., Columbia Univ., 1962.)
Candidate for Dr.P.H. (Epidemiology).
Research staff, SPH, Columbia Univ., N. Y.
425 S. Huntington Ave., Jamaica Plain, Mass.
Wife: Rita
Daughter; Abigail 1
KING, WILLIAM H.
(B.A., North Texas State Univ., 1955; M.D., Univ. of Texas, 1959-)
Candidate for M.P.H. (Aviation Medicine).
Flight Surgeon, 494lh Bomb Wing, Strategic Air Command, Sheppard AFB,
Texas.
104 E. Sixth, Irving, Texas
Wife: Audie
KISCH, ARNOLD 1.
(A.B., Columbia Coll., 1954; M.D., Harvard Univ., 195S.)
Candid ite for M.P.H. (Public Health Practice).
Asst. Resident, Orthopedics, Children's Hospital, Boston.
21 Chestnut St., Boston 8, Mass.
Wife: Gloria
Son: Theodore 2 mos.
KLEVAY, LESLIE M.
(B.S., LIniv. of Wisconsin, 1956; M.D., Univ. of Wisconsin, I960; S.M.,
Harvard Univ., 1963 )
Candidate for S.D. in Hyg. (Nutrition).
Medical Intern. Washington LIniv. Med. Service, St. Louis City Hospital.
M.S. in Hyg.,
M.D., Stanford
76
KRAIDMAN, EMMA
(B.A., Univ. of Chicago, 1953; B.S., Brooklyn Coll., 1953; M.A., Clark Univ.,
1955: Ph.D., Clark Univ., 1958.)
Candidate for S.M. in Hyg. (Community Mental Health).
Chief Psychologist of Inpatient Service and Neurology Unit, Children's Med.
Center, Boston.
85 Leland Road, Chestnut Hill 67, Mass.
Husband; Leonard
KUGELL, LORRAINE D.
(B.A., Lfniv. of Vermont, 1963 )
Candidate for S.M. in Hyg. (Nutrition).
LaTORRE, PHILIP
(S.B., Northeastern Univ., 1952; S.M., Harvard Univ., 1954.)
Part-time Student (Radiological Health).
Chief, Industrial Health & Safety, Watertown Arsenal, Watertown, Mass.
95 Spring Street, Wakefield, Mass.
Wife; Margaret
Sons; Philip 6, David 4
(B.S., City Coll, of N. Y., 1950; M.A., City Coll, of N.
Univ. of Washington, 1958.)
■< ' Candidate for S.M. in Hyg. (Community Mental Health).
" Administrator, Pueblo Guidance Center, Pueblo, Colorado.
199 Park Drive, Boston, Mass.
Daughters; Stephanie 4, Anna 2
LeZOTTE, LLOYD A., JR.
(A.B., Univ. of Nebraska, 1950; M.A., Univ. of Nebraska, 1951; Ph.D.,
Purdue Univ., 1954; M.D., Univ. of Puerto Rico, I960.)
Part-time Special Student (Biostatistics).
Trainee, Clin. Pharmacology, Lemuel Shattuck Hosp., Tufts Univ.
1 1 Tara Road, Framingham, Mass.
Wife; Luisa
Sons; Lloyd, Jr. 11, Raymond 9, Philip 5, Francis 1
Daughter; Maria 7
Y., 1951; PhD.,
LI, YLILING
(B.A., Wellesley Coll., 1962.)
Part-time Student (Biostatistics).
Research Asst, in Biometry, Biomathematics Lab., Harvard Med. School.
LOGSDON, DONALD N.
(B.S., Wake Forest Coll., 1956; M.D., Univ. of Florida, I960.)
Candidate for M.P.H. (Epidemiology).
Asst. Health Ofiicer, Palm Beach Co. Health Dept., Florida.
219 Almeria Road, W. Palm Beach, Florida
Wife; Ann
LUCAS, ADETOKUNBO O.
(B.S., Univ. of Durham, 1953; M.B., B.S., Univ. of Durham, 1956; D.P.H.,
Queen's Univ., 1958; M.R.C.P. (Lonck)n), 1959; D.T.M.&H., London School
of Hyg. and Trop. Med., I960.)
Candidate for S.M. in Hyg. (Tropical Public Health).
Lecturer, Prev. and Social Med., anti Consultant Physician, LIniv. Coll. Hosp.,
Univ. of Ibadan, Ibadan, Nigeria.
Wife; Kofoworola (Kufu)
Sons; 'Funlade 5, 'Lapido 4 Daughter; ’Funto 21/3
77
MacGAFFEY, KEITH
(A.B., Colgate Univ., 1955; M.D., Univ. of Rochester, 1959.)
Part-time Student (Biostatistics).
Research Fellow, Clin. Pharmacology, Tufts Univ. (Lemuel Shattuck Hosp.)
62 Summit Ave., Brookline, Mass.
Wife: Mary
Daughter: Jennifer 5 mos.
MAIZTEGUI, JULIO 1.
(M.D., Buenos Aires Llniv. Med. School, 1957.)
Candidate for M.P.H. (Microbiology).
Research Fellow in Bact. and Immunology, Harvard Med. School and Boston
City Hosp.; Buenos Aires Llniv. Med. School (Dept, of Infectious Diseases).
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Wife: Laura
Son: Francisco 2
Daughters: Laura 5, Marcela 4, Maria 1
MARTIKAINEN, A. HELEN
(A.B., Bates Coll., 1939; M.P.H. , Yale Univ., 1941; Sc.D. (Hon.), Bates Coll.,
1957.)
Candidate for Dr.P.H. (Public Health Practice).
Chief, Health Education, World Health Or.rranization, Geneva, Switzerland.
Europe: 47 Bis Florissant, Geneva; U.S.A.: 26 Morningside Drive, Laconia,
New Hampshire.
MASON, JAMES O.
(B.A., Univ. of Utah, 1955; M.D., IJniv. of Utah, 1958; M.P.H., Harvard
Univ., 1963.)
Candidate for Dr.P.H. (Tropical Public Health).
Epidemiology Branch, Communicable Disease Center, Atlanta, Ga.
9820 Poppy Lane, Sandy, Utah.
Wife: Marie
Sons: James 10, Bruce 5, Ralph 3, Samuel 4 mos.
Daughter: Susan 7
MAZUMDER, MALAY
(B.S., Hooghly Mohsin Coll., Univ. of Calcutta, 1956; M.Sc., Univ. of Calcutta,
1959.)
Full-time Student (Industrial Hygiene).
Scientific Officer. Atomic Energy Establishment, Bombay, India.
Vill. & P. O. Madral, Dist. 24-Parganas, West Bengal, India.
MAZZONE, WALTER F.
(A.B., San Jose State ColL, 1941; B.S., Llniv. of Southern Calif., 1948.)
Candidate for S.M. in Hyg. ( Physiology ) .
LL S. Navy, Submarine and Diving Research, Submarine Base, Groton, Conn.;
Director, Schot)l of Submarine Med.
390 Long Hill Road, Groton, Conn.
Wife: Lucie
Son: Rt)bert l4
McNICHOL, MARY A.
(A.B., Boston Univ., 1957; A.M., Boston Llniv., 1958.)
Candidate for S.M. in Hyg. (Microbiology).
Peace Corps Volunteer.
38 North Shore Ave., Danvers, Mass.
MOLLOY, MAUREEN K.
(B.A.. Barnard Coll., 1953; M.D., State Univ. of N. Y., 1957.)
Candidate for S.M. in Hyg. (Maternal and Child Health).
Resident. Orthopedic Surgery, Mass. General Hosp.
107 Jersey St., Boston 15, Mass.
78
NITZBERG. DAVID M.
(A.B., Columbia Coll., 1936; M.S., Ohio State Univ., 1957; S.M.Hy^., HarvarJ
Univ., 1963.)
Candidate for S.D. in Hyg. (Biostatistics).
Student, H.S.P.H.
22 Stimson Ave., Lexington, Mass.
Wife: Roslyn
Sons: Michael 6, Steven 3
PARTHASARATHY, NADIPURAM R.
(B.Sc., First Grade Coll., 1952; B.Sc., Maharaja's Coll., 1955; M.Sc.,
Candidate for S.M. in Hyg. (Biostatistics).
Asst. Research Officer, National Trachoma Control Program, Aligarh (UP,
India).
2846, V.V. Mohlla, Mysore 2, India.
PETERS, JOHN M.
(B.S., Univ. of LItah, 1957; M.D., Univ. of Utah, 1960)
Candidate for M.P.H. (Occupational Medicine).
Nuclear Med. Officer, U. S. Army Engineers, Washington, D. C.
Brigham City, Utah.
Wife: Carolyn
Sons: John 5, Philip 4, Charles 1 mo.
Daughter: Susa 2
PLANK, STEPHEN J.
(Ph.B., Univ. of Chicago, 1948; A.B., Univ. of Calif., 1951; M.D., Univ. of
Calif., 1955; M.P.H., Harvard Llniv., 1961)
Candidate for Dr.P.H. (Microbiology).
Staff Physician, Coco Solo Hospital, Panama Canal Zone.
Carmel, California.
Wife: Jean
Son: Tino 7
Daughter: Suzanne 1
POLLACK, EARL S.
(B.S., Univ. of Minnesota, 1947; M.A., Univ. of Minnesota, 1948.)
Candidate for S.D. in Hyg. (Biostatistics).
Chief, Hospital Studies Section, Biometrics Branch, National Institute of
Mental Health.
11212 Bybee St., Silver Spring, Maryland.
Wife: Judith
Daughter: Joan 10
POSADA, HERNANDO
(M.D., Univ. Nacional de Colombia, 1954.)
Candidate for S.M. in Hyg. (Maternal and Child Health).
Clinical and Research Fellow, Children's Med. Center, Boston.
50 School St., East Williston, L. L, N. Y.
Wife: Elvirita
PRATT, EDWARD O.
(M.B., L.R.C.P., M.R.C.S., Royal Coll, of Surgeons, 1954,)
Candidate for M.P.H. (Public Health Practice).
Med. Health Officer, Dept, of Med. Services, Lffiiv, Coll, of Sierra Leone.
II, Waterloo St., Freetown, Sierra Leone.
RABIN, DAVID L.
(A.B., Univ. of Arizona, 1954; M.D., Washington Univ. (St. Louis), 1958.)
Candidate for M.P.H. (Epitlemiology).
Sr. Asst. Resident in Med., Cornell-Bellevue Memt)rial Hospital, N. '5'.
101 Cottage Ave., Lancaster, Pa.
Wife: Laurel
79
t RASHID, ABDUR
(B.Sc., Chitagong Coll,, 1954; M.Sc., Dacca Univ., 1956; M.Sc., Karachi
Candidate for S.M. in Hyg. (Biostatistics).
Statistical Officer, Ministry of Health, Govt, of Pakistan.
Village, Fatehpur, P. O. Madanhat, Chittagong, Pakistan.
Children: Shahryar 6, Shahjahan 4, Shahnewaz 2, Hasina 6 mos.
RASMUSSEN, ERIK G.
(D.D.S., Copenhagen Univ,, 1958.)
Candidate for M.P.H. (Microbiology).
Research Fellow in Bacteriology, Forsyth Dental Center, Boston 6, Witten-
berggade, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Wife: Sylvia
REINHERZ, HELEN Z.
(A.B., Wheaton Coll,, 1944; Simmons Coll., 1946; S.M. Hyg., Harvard Univ.,
1962.)
Candidate for S.D. in Hyg. (Community Mental Health).
Consultant, Psychiatric Social Work, Metropolitan State FIosp., Waltham, Mass.
17 Corey Road, Malden, Mass.
Husband: Samuel
Son: Ellis 13V2
REIST, PARKER C.
(B.S., Penna. State Univ., 1955; S.M., Mass. Inst, of Tech., 1957; S.M. Hyg.,
Harvard Univ., 19'63.)
Candidate for S.D. in Hyg. (Radiological Health).
Sanitary Engineer, U.S.P.H.S.
720 No. Allen St., State College, Pa.
Wife: Janet
RILEY, LEO H.
(A.B., Boston Coll., 1940; M.D,, Boston Univ., 1943.)
Candidate for S M. in Hyg. (Biostatistics and Epidemiology)
Director of Research, American Center for Research in Blindness and Rehabili¬
tation, Newton, Mass.
525 Walnut St., Newtonville, Mass.
Wife: Eleanor
Sons: Leo 16, David 15, Mark 7, John 5
Daughters: Lenore 13, Marla 11, Maureen 9, Norma 8
RUNYAN, WILLIAM S.
((B.S., Lffiiv. of Idaho, I960; M.S., Univ. of Idaho, 1962.)
Candidate for S.D. in Hyg. (Nutrition).
Research Asst. Dept, of Nutrition, H.S.P.H.
Ukiah, Calif.
Wife: Thora
Daughter: Laura 2
SALINA, RICHARD J
(B.S., Univ. of Pittsburgh, 1949: M.D., Univ. of Pittsburgh,
Candidate for M.P.H. (Aerospace Medicine).
Chief of Aerospace Medicine, Flickam Air Force Base, Hawaii.
6914 Kelly Street, Pittsburgh, Pa.
Wife: Grace
Daughter: Deborah 6
SAMUELS, LARRY D.
(A.B., Blackburn Coll., 1955; B.S., Univ. of Illinois, 1957; M.D., Univ. of
Illinois, 1959; S.M. Hyg., Harvard Univ., 1961.)
Candidate for S.D. in Hyg. (Radiobiology).
Director, Midwest Environmental Health Study, U.S.P.H.S.
New Windsor, Illinois
Wife: Margaret
Sons: Larry 5, Nils 2, Rolf 2
Daughters: Shirley 6, Lisa 6 mos.
1954.)
80
SAVAGE, HILBERT BRYANT, JR.
(M.D., Univ., of Tennessee, 1958.)
Candidate for M.P.H. (Aerospace Medicine).
Director, Flight Med. Service, Bergstrom AFB, Texas.
3624 Rhea Ave., Memphis, Tenn.
Wife; Anita
Daughters; Dawn 6, Wendy 4
SCHAEFER, ANNE W.
(A.B., Trinity Coll., 1963.)
Candidate for S.M. in Hyg. (Radiological Health).
12 Brookside Drive, Westport, Conn.
SCHRAMM, VERN L.
(B.S., South Dakota State Coll., 1963 )
Candidate for S.M. in Hyg. (Nutrition).
Coolidge, Arizona.
Wife; Deanna
SIKES, R. KEITH
(B.A., Emory Univ., 1949: D.V.M., Auburn Univ., 1957.)
Candidate for M.P.H. (Microbiology).
Chief, Rabies Investig. Lab., C.D.C., U.S.P.H.S.
2554 Flemington Road, Atlanta 29, Ga.
Wife; Narene
Sons; Bob 15, Barry 13, Tommy 1
SIMMONS, ALVIN J.
(B.S., Boston Coll., 1952, M.S., Univ. of Massachsusetts, 1954, Ph.D., Univ.
of Massachusetts, 1960; S.M. Hyg., Harvard Univ., 1962.)
Candidate for S.D. in Hyg. (Epidemiology and Biostatistics).
Admin. Asst., Human Relations Service of Wellesley.
Wellesley Hills, Mass.
7 Middle St., So. Dartmouth, Mass.
Wife; Joan
Sons; Chris 5, Mike 4, John 1 Daughters; Polly 2, Lacy 1 mo.
SIMMONS, HENRY E.
(B.S., Univ. of Pittsburgh, 1951; M.D., LIniv. of Pittsburgh, 1957.)
Candidate for M.P.H. (Public Health Practice).
Private Practice, Internal Medicine.
3 North St., Lexington, Mass.
Wife; Sally
Daughters; Kathleen 9, Betsy 7, Molly 4, Julie 1
SMITH, ROBERT G.
(S.B., Univ. of Oklahoma, 1956; M.D., Washington Univ. (St. Louis), 1959;
L.L.B., Harvard Univ., 1963.)
Candidate for M.P.H, (General Program).
Asst, in Med., Peter Bent Brigham Hosp., and Physician, Harvard LIniv. Health
Services.
R.F.D. No. 3, Broken Arrow, Oklahoma.
SMITHURST, BARRY A.
(M.B.B.S., Sydney Univ., 1951; M.R.A.C.P., Royal Australian Coll, of Physi¬
cians, 1957.)
Candidate for M.P.H. (Tropical Medicine).
Asst. Physician, St. Vincent's Hosp., Melbourne, Australia.
81
SNIDER, HOPE H.
(A.B., Vassal' Coll., 1957; M.D., Harvard Univ., 1962.)
Candidate for M.P.H. (General Program).
Research Asst. Harvard Dental School, Cambridge, Mass.
Husband: Joseph
STEEN, ARVID
(M.D., Oslo Univ., 1950.)
Candidate for S.M. in Hyg. (Community Mental Health).
Asst. Director, Psychiatric Division, Norwegian Health Services.
Helsedirektoratet, Oslo-Dep., Oslo, Norway.
Wife: Kari
Sons: Gunnar 15, Arvid 13
TEWARI, RAM P.
(B.Sc., Lucknow LIniv., 1956; B.V.Sc.&A.H., Agra Univ.,
Agra Univ., 1962.)
Candidate for S.M. in Hyg. (Microbiology).
Veterinary Asst. Surgeon, UP, India.
699, Nakamuzuffra, Eaizabad, U.P., India.
I960; M.V.Sc.,
THOMSON, CAPTANE P.
(A.B., LIniv. of Calif., 1952; M.D., Univ. of Calif., 1955.)
Candidate for S.M. in Hyg. (Community Mental Health).
Clinical and Research Eellow in Psychiatry, Mass. General Hospital.
5800 Florence Terrace, Oakland, Calif.
Wife; Helen
UNDERHILL, DWIGHT W.
(B.E., Yale Univ., 1958; S.M. Hyg., Harvard LIniv., 1963.)
Candidate for S.D. in Hyg. (Industrial Hygiene).
Chemist, Fort Detrick, Md.
4509 Burlington Place, Washington, D. C.
VARNER, MICHAEL O.
(B.S., California State Polytechnic Coll., 1963-)
Candidate for S.M. in Hyg. (Industrial Hygiene).
1760 San Luis Drive, San Luis Obispo, Calif.
Wife: Sharon
VEIT, ROBERT W.
(A. A., Coll, of the Sequoias, 1959: B.S., Calif. State Polytechnic Coll., 1962.)
Candidate for S.M. in Hyg. (Industrial Hygiene).
Engineering Student Trainee, State of Calif., Dept, of Water Resources,
Cayucos, Calif.
2001 W. Laurel, Visalia, Calif.
Wife: Virgie
Son; Kevin IV2
VIERLING, ANTON E.
(B.S., Univ. of Notre Dame, 1961; M.S., Univ. of Connecticut, 1963.)
Candi(.!ate for S.M. in Hyg. (Radiation Biology).
L'niv. Lab. Instructor.
207 Park Dri\e, Boston, Mass.
Wife: Jacqueline
82
WATKINS, ELIZABEl.I L.
(A.B., Bryn Mawr, 1949; M.S.S.A., Western Reserve Univ., 1950; S.M.Hyg.,
Harvard Univ., 1958.)
Candidate for S.D. in Hy^. (Maternal and Child Health).
Asst. Professor of Social Work in Public Health, Elniv. of Michigan.
5 Cutler Ave., Cambridge, Mass.
WEEKS, DAVID E.
(M.D., Northwestern Univ., 1958.)
Candidate for M.P.H (Tropical Public Health).
Supervising Physician for ARAMCO.
ARAMCO 2416, Dhahran, Saudi Arabia.
Wife: Nancy
Sons: David, II 3V2, Benjamin U/2
WEISS.DEBORAH H.
(A.B.. Antioch College, 1962.)
Candidate for S M. in Hyg. (Nutrition).
169 North Gro\e Street, Oak Park, Illinois.
WETTERMARK, LENA E. B.
(Fil. Kand., Uppsala Univ., 1962.)
Part-time Student (Biostatistics).
Programmer, Dept, of Biostatitsics, H.S.P.H.
109 Lakeview Gardens, 15 Kansas St., Natick, Mass.
Husband: Gunnar
WORTH, DOROTHY J.
(M.D., St. Louis Univ., 1956.)
Candidate for M.P.H. (Maternal and Child Health).
School Physician, Newton, Mass.
33 Washington St., Newton, Mass.
Husband: Robert
Sons: Benjamin 6, Joshua 4
Daughter: Rachel 2
YODER, JOHN D.
(B.S., Pennsylvania State Univ., 1952; S.M.Hyg., Harvard Univ., 1954.)
Candidate for S.D. in Hyg. (Industrial Hygiene).
Industrial Hygienist, Humble Oil and Refining Co., Linden, N. J.
94 Pembrook Drive, Kenilworth, N. J.
Wife: Nancy
Son: James 6
Daughters: Karen 11, Kathleen 9
ZAWAWI, OMAR
(M.B.B.Ch., Cairo Univ., 1958.)
Candidate for M.P.H. (Public Health Practice).
Representative of Ministry of Health at Dammam, Saudi Arabia.
Dammam, Saudi Arabia.
Wife: Amul
Son: Waleed 2
ZISKIND, ALAN
(A.B., Columbia Coll., 1953; M.D., Boston Univ., 1957.)
Candidate for M.P.H. (Maternal and Child Health).
Pediatrician, Private Practice.
32 Douglas Road, Belmont, Mass.
Wife: Barbara
Sons: Andrew 5, Mark 4, Michael 2
83
SPECIAL THANKS
DEE CARROLL — The broad strokes of her word pictures sketch the
activities that have filled the year at the International House.
DICK EASTON — Special mention goes to the Yearbook Committee’s
original and creative layout man.
TED POLUMBAUM — Our photographer mixed efficiency, humor
and imagination in the variegated postures and poses in which he
captured us.
SARGENT SHRIVER — While indicating that formal permission or
approval from the family for the dedication to our late President,
John E. Kennedy, was not necessary, Mr. Shriver said, "I can
think of no reason for anyone to object to your very generous
and warm-hearted gesture.”
CLAIRE WASSERBOEHR — As our indefatigable Yearbook secretary
and morale booster, she has consulted on traditional practices,
chased down delinquent contributions, and done a yeoman’s job
on the manuscript.
NANCY WEEKS — The bold cover design evolved through tour de¬
velopmental stages. Her design on the Christmas card has been
the model for the world distribution of the class inside the cover.
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